Cape Fear Academy has a program for dyslexic students.
Susan E. Gately has written: 'A comparison of decoding strategies found in dysphonetic dyslexic children with different cognitive styles' -- subject(s): Dyslexic children, Cognition in children, Learning disabled children
Yes it is called dyslexic
Dyslexic is the adjective form of dyslexia, a learning disorder which makes it hard to concentrate on objects on a page.
Dyslexic children seem to have trouble learning early reading skills, problems hearing individual sounds in words, analyzing whole words in parts, and blending sounds into words.
No. It depends on writing, reading, math, and related skills.
Yes - it's called dyscalculia and is defined as a special learning disability in terms of learning mathematical concepts.
Susan Ann Vogel has written: 'College students with learning disabilities' -- subject(s): Education (Higher), Handbooks, manuals, Learning disabled 'Syntactic abilities in normal and dyslexic children' -- subject(s): Ability testing, Dyslexia, In infancy and childhood, Language acquisition, Language development, Reading
well most of his teachers thought he had a learning disability. Dyslexic maybe,
Louis Pasteur was dyslexic and dysgraphic, according to his french wiki page.
Mentally challenged, learning disabled, developmentally delayed, special needs, learning delayed,...or simply disabled. Retarded and slow are demeaning.
All learning problems are not due to Learning Disability but all Learning Disabled shows learning problems.
An illiterate person is one who cannot read because they have never been taught how. A dyslexic person suffers from a learning disability which makes it more difficult for them to read.